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Friday, March 03, 2023

Thoughts on events and if excommunicated for political incorrectness who do you go to in order to become unexcommunicated. With Catholics, they have a Pope, for religious matters. My presumption, political correctness is not a religion, and my hope is I am correct.

 Start here, but this is a tangential effort to back up a part of the headline which does not carry the major drift of these thoughts. But it touches things.

Next, one form of posting would be to incrementally work a theme to build to an ultimate resolution, Wagnerian like, with a finality disclosure of where things were intended all along to reach.

Instead, this link. 

 https://dilbert.com/search_results?terms=Is+it+okay+to+be+white

Upfront. Let it all hang out. The link and content are self-explanatory, provide a basis for thoughts early in the post, and inject wry humor early too.

But that begs the question of how you go about getting a dispensation to return if excommunicated for political incorrectness. It is likely the linked resource includes some degree of truth, were there formal arbitration,

 Boss Wins In Arbitration  - Dilbert by Scott Adams

but still - who do you go to once tarred and feathered as politically incorrect even when the incorrectness is generally viewed as over the top. Every newspaper in creation, in lockstep, have dropped you except for the ones that never carried you in the first place. Who you gonna call? Not Ghostbusters, not this time, this instance.

Leave it there since the theme is set and it is time to segue.

I saw online a presidential executive order title, so I went to whitehouse.gov to reach their listing of executive orders, their index, to find the one sought.

Big mistake. They issue the things, often long and turgid, but then the site has no simple linking function. Websearch time. And, lo, here it is.

Lengthy and focused on equity, since it uses the word interminably. (There was an executive order  on student debt, now a Supreme Court thing; but debt-equity is simply an extraneous use of the word serving two purposes, and this thing is the other sense of equity). A quote - the order's preamble:

Section 1.  Policy.  On my first day in office, I signed Executive Order 13985 of January 20, 2021 (Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government), which charged the Federal Government with advancing equity for all, including communities that have long been underserved, and addressing systemic racism in our Nation’s policies and programs.By advancing equity, the Federal Government can support and empower all Americans, including the many communities in America that have been underserved, discriminated against, and adversely affected by persistent poverty and inequality.  We can also deliver resources and benefits equitably to the people of the United States and rebuild trust in Government.

     Over the past 2 years, through landmark legislation — including the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (Public Law 117‑2); the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Public Law 117-58) (Bipartisan Infrastructure Law); division A of Public Law 117-167, known as the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors (CHIPS) Act of 2022; Public Law 117-169, commonly referred to as the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022; and the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (Public Law 117-159) — as well as executive action, my Administration has vigorously championed racial equity and has advanced equal opportunity for underserved communities.  Executive departments and agencies (agencies) have engaged in historic work assessing how their policies and programs perpetuate barriers for underserved communities and developing strategies for removing those barriers.  They have made important progress incorporating an evidence-based approach to equitable policymaking and implementation, and they have crafted new action plans to advance equity.  In short, my Administration has embedded a focus on equity into the fabric of Federal policymaking and service delivery.  Our work to transform the way the Federal Government serves the American people has been complemented by Executive Order 14035 of June 25, 2021 (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility in the Federal Workforce), which continues to help ensure that my Administration — the most diverse in our Nation’s history — reflects the growing diversity of the communities we serve.

     My Administration’s commitment to equity has produced better decision-making and more equitable outcomes.  We have delivered the most equitable economic recovery in memory, and, driven by the expanded Child Tax Credit, we cut child poverty to its lowest rate on record in 2021, including record low Black, Latino, Native American, and rural child poverty.  Under my Administration, the economy has created nearly 11 million jobs, and we have brought down unemployment nationwide — in particular for Black and Latino workers, for whom unemployment rates are near 50-year lows.  My Administration has provided emergency rental assistance to help millions of families stay in their homes, and we have prohibited Federal contractors from paying people with disabilities subminimum wages.  We are rebuilding roads and bridges, replacing the Nation’s lead pipes to provide clean drinking water for all, delivering access to affordable high-speed internet to Americans in both rural and urban communities, investing in public transit, and reconnecting communities previously cut off from economic opportunity by highways, rail lines, or disinvestment.  My Administration has provided funding to improve accessibility for passengers with disabilities on rail systems and in airports, expanded health coverage for millions of Americans, and expanded home- and community-based services so more people with disabilities and older adults can live independently.  We have secured billions of dollars in direct new investments for Tribal Nations and Native American communities and have directed an increase in the share of Federal Government contract spending awarded to small disadvantaged businesses.  My Administration has taken action to strengthen public safety, advance criminal justice reform, correct our country’s failed approach to marijuana, protect civil rights, and stand up against rising extremism and hate-fueled violence that threaten the fabric of our democracy.  We have taken historic steps to advance full equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex (LGBTQI+) Americans, including by ending the ban on transgender service members in our military; prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics across Federal programs; and signing into law the Respect for Marriage Act (Public Law 117-228) to preserve protections for the rights of same-sex and interracial couples.  My Administration is also implementing the first-ever National Strategy on Gender Equity and Equality to ensure that all people, regardless of gender, have the opportunity to realize their full potential.

     These transformative achievements have advanced the work of building a more equitable Nation.  Yet, members of underserved communities — many of whom have endured generations of discrimination and disinvestment — still confront significant barriers to realizing the full promise of our great Nation, and the Federal Government has a responsibility to remove these barriers.  It is imperative to reject the narrow, cramped view of American opportunity as a zero-sum game.  When any person or community is denied freedom, dignity, and prosperity, our entire Nation is held back.  But when we lift each other up, we are all lifted up.  Therefore, my Administration must take additional action across the Federal Government — in collaboration with civil society, the private sector, and State and local government — to continue the work begun with Executive Order 13985 to combat discrimination and advance equal opportunity, including by redressing unfair disparities and removing barriers to Government programs and services.  Achieving racial equity and support for underserved communities is not a one-time project.  It must be a multi-generational commitment, and it must remain the responsibility of agencies across the Federal Government.  It therefore continues to be the policy of my Administration to advance an ambitious, whole-of-government approach to racial equity and support for underserved communities and to continuously embed equity into all aspects of Federal decision-making.

     This order builds upon my previous equity-related Executive Orders by extending and strengthening equity-advancing requirements for agencies, and it positions agencies to deliver better outcomes for the American people.  In doing so, the Federal Government shall continue to pursue ambitious goals to build a strong, fair, and inclusive workforce and economy; invest in communities where Federal policies have historically impeded equal opportunity — both rural and urban — in ways that mitigate economic displacement, expand access to capital, preserve housing and neighborhood affordability, root out discrimination in the housing market, and build community wealth; advance equity in health, including mental and behavioral health and well-being; deliver an equitable response to the COVID-19 pandemic; deliver environmental justice and implement the Justice40 Initiative; build prosperity in rural communities; ensure equitable procurement practices, including through small disadvantaged businesses contracting and the Buy Indian Act (25 U.S.C. 47); pursue educational equity so that our Nation’s schools put every student on a path to success; improve our Nation’s criminal justice system to end unjust disparities, strengthen public safety, and ensure equal justice under law; promote equity in science and root out bias in the design and use of new technologies, such as artificial intelligence; protect the right to vote and realize the promise of our Nation’s civil rights laws; and promote equity and human rights around the world through our foreign policy and foreign assistance.  By redoubling our efforts, the Federal Government can help bridge the gap between the world we see and the future we seek.

Wordy and exceptionally self congratulatory while aiming toward a constituency, to where you'd think that if some underling were put to that much flowery self back patting text creation that there'd be a strong will to put the politicking into an easy homepage whitehouse.gov index, as simply effort toward working the political base. 

But, again that is only the preamble, not what is being ordered. Moving to that:

Sec. 2.  Establishing Equity-Focused Leadership Across the Federal Government.  (a)  Establishment of Agency Equity Teams.  The Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of Defense, the Attorney General, the Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of Agriculture, the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, the Secretary of Transportation, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of Education, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, the Secretary of Homeland Security, the Administrator of the Small Business Administration, the Commissioner of Social Security, the Administrator of General Services, the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Director of the National Science Foundation, and the Director of the Office of Personnel Management (agency heads) shall, within 30 days of the date of this order, ensure that they have in place an Agency Equity Team within their respective agencies to coordinate the implementation of equity initiatives and ensure that their respective agencies are delivering equitable outcomes for the American people. 

    (i)    Each Agency Equity Team shall be led by a designated senior official (senior designee) charged with implementing my Administration’s equity initiatives, and shall include senior officials from the office of the agency head and the agency’s program, policy, civil rights, regulatory, science, technology, service delivery, financial assistance and grants, data, budget, procurement, public engagement, legal, and evaluation offices, as well as the agency’s Chief Diversity Officer, to the extent applicable.  Agency Equity Teams shall include a combination of competitive service employees, as defined by 5 U.S.C. 2102(a), and appointees, as defined in Executive Order 13989 of January 20, 2021 (Ethics Commitments by Executive Branch Personnel), and, to the extent practicable, shall build upon and coordinate with the agency’s existing structures and processes, including with the agency’s environmental justice officer designated pursuant to Executive Order 14008 of January 27, 2021 (Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad), and with the senior agency official designated to coordinate with the Gender Policy Council pursuant to Executive Order 14020 of March 8, 2021 (Establishment of the White House Gender Policy Council). 

    (ii)   The senior designee at each agency shall be responsible for delivering equitable outcomes, to the extent consistent with applicable law, and shall report to the agency head. 

    (iii)  Each Agency Equity Team shall support continued equity training and equity leadership development for staff across all levels of the agency’s workforce. 

    (iv)   Each agency’s senior designee shall coordinate with the agency head, agency budget officials, and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to ensure that the Agency Equity Team has sufficient resources, including staffing and data collection capacity, to advance the agency’s equity goals.  Agency heads shall ensure that their respective Agency Equity Teams serve in an advisory and coordination role on priority agency actions.

There is more. You'd expect so. But this is a seed. "Priority agency actions." That has to be getting Dilbert back on track because the substantial body of Dilbert fans make up a constituency that grudgingly helped put Biden in the White House in place of Trump, by their reluctant voting for lesser evil. 

Give them something back, eh? And beyond committees and panels and agency officials, Biden holds the pardon power. If crimes can be pardoned one could argue that political incorrectness also could be. Unless such incorrectness is viewed in a harsher light than clear law-breaking crime. Which might be today's truth.

Back to the executive order, and jumping a bit to Section 10 -

   Sec. 10.  Definitions.  For purposes of this order:  

    (a)  The term “equity” means the consistent and systematic treatment of all individuals in a fair, just, and impartial manner, including individuals who belong to communities that often have been denied such treatment, such as Black, Latino, Indigenous and Native American, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander persons and other persons of color; members of religious minorities; women and girls; LGBTQI+ persons; persons with disabilities; persons who live in rural areas; persons who live in United States Territories; persons otherwise adversely affected by persistent poverty or inequality; and individuals who belong to multiple such communities.  

    (b)  The term “underserved communities” refers to those populations as well as geographic communities that have been systematically denied the opportunity to participate fully in aspects of economic, social, and civic life, as defined in Executive Orders 13985 and 14020. 

    (c)  The term “equitable development” refers to a positive development approach that employs processes, policies, and programs that aim to meet the needs of all communities and community members, with a particular focus on underserved communities and populations.

The three subsections are quoted because the shopping list of subpart(a) omits mention of young white men and the elderly. As communities. You'd think Biden would have not omitted that, since he was once one and now is the other.  

And the elderly as an underserved community, reflect back to when Clarence Thomas ran EEOC and pigeon-holed  age discrimination complaints as if there were none. 

You'd think Biden might recall that after having shepherded Thomas to a Supreme Court seat in contested hearings before a committee Biden, back then, headed. 

But I digress.

Dilbert's offense was political incorrectness done in a way that delighted many, but made enemies who all to quickly came to bury Dilbert and not to praise him.

Since nobody else is stepping forward as the Pope of political correctness with power to grant Scott Adams and hence Dilbert a dispensation and reinstatement, Joe Biden, you are the chief executive of a nation, you hold pardon power,

Make it so, Joe. Don't say it ain't so, Joe.

.................................

Yeah. It could have been spun out differently, in a more subtle progression. But each of us has our limitations; subtlety being a Crabgrass absence. Criticism aplenty, subtlety a drought. But -

BOTTOM LINE: The troubling too eager lockstep newspaper will to put Dilbert into history's dustbin is a crock. It needs undoing. These papers do not seem to care about having credibility except in a way that suggests ill-will toward intelligent people not in lockstep with the will of power, which is the constituency these media "giants" collectively in conscious parallelism serve.

__________UPDATE__________

That Biden Executive Order was launched as a political football for 2024 and Trump caught it and threw it back, (Breitbart reporting). The two now can play catch.

While at Breitbart, not news because so expected, CPAC has the bulls shitting.  

More Breitbart, Stoking the fire. Mocking the fire. More stoking.

___________FURTHER UPDATE__________

https://dilbert.com/search_results?terms=political+correctness

__________FURTHER UPDATE___________

They don't have Rush anymore. So they reach. Stopping by Breitbart occasionally is its own reward. And they don't have Breitbart himself anymore, nor Bannon. But they persevere.